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A cross-country comparison of smokers’ reasons for thinking about quitting over time: Findings from the International Tobacco Control Four Country Survey (ITC-4C), 2002-2015
Karin A. Kasza,1 Andrew J. Hyland,1 Ron Borland,2 Ann McNeill,3 Geoffrey T. Fong,4,5,6 Matthew J. Carpenter,7 Timea Partos,3 K. Michael Cummings7
1Department of Health Behavior, Roswell Park Cancer Institute, Buffalo, New York, USA2Cancer Council Victoria, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia 3National Addiction Centre and Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience, King’s College London, London, UK4School of Public Health and Health Systems, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada 5 Department of Psychology, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada. 6 Ontario Institute for Cancer Research, Toronto, Ontario, Canada 7Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina, USA
Corresponding author: Karin Kasza, Department of Health Behavior, Roswell Park Cancer Institute, Buffalo, NY, USA; phone: (716) 845-8085; email: [email protected]
Journal: Tobacco Control Word count: 3,954Tables: 4Supplemental Tables: 1Supplemental Figures: 1
Funding: The ITC Four Country Survey has been funded by the US National Cancer Institute (P50 CA111326, P01 CA138389, R01 CA100362, R01 CA090955), Canadian Institutes of Health Research (57897, 79551, and 115016), Commonwealth Department of Health and Aging, National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia (265903, 450110, 1005922, and 1106451), Cancer Research UK (C312/A3726, C312/A6465, and C312/A11039, C312/A11943), Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (045734), and Canadian Tobacco Control Research Initiative (014578). Additional support was provided to Geoffrey T. Fong from a Senior Investigator Award from the Ontario Institute for Cancer Research and a Prevention Scientist Award from the Canadian Cancer Society Research Institute. None of the sponsors played any direct role in the design or conduct of the study, the collection, management, analysis or interpretation of the data, the preparation of the manuscript, or the decision to submit the manuscript for publication.
Ethics approval: All ITC Surveys were conducted with the approval of the Office of Research Ethics Committee at the University of Waterloo, Canada and the respective internal ethics board for each country.
Declaration of interests: Dr. Cummings has received grant funding from Pfizer, Inc. to study the impact of a hospital based tobacco cessation intervention and also has served as an expert
witness in litigation filed against the tobacco industry. No other potential conflict of interest was declared.
ABSTRACT
Objective: To explore between-country differences and within-country trends over time in
smokers’ reasons for thinking about quitting and the relationship between reasons and making a
quit attempt.
Methods: Participants were nationally representative samples of adult smokers from the United
Kingdom (UK, N=4,717), Canada (N=4,884), the United States (US, N=6,703), and Australia
(N=4,482), surveyed as part of the International Tobacco Control Four Country Survey between
2002 and 2015. Generalized estimating equations were used to evaluate differences among
countries in smokers’ reasons for thinking about quitting and their association with making a quit
attempt at follow-up wave.
Results: Smokers’ concern for personal health was consistently the most frequently endorsed
reason for thinking about quitting in each country and across waves, and was most strongly
associated with making a quit attempt. UK smokers were less likely than their counterparts to
endorse health concerns, but were more likely to endorse medication- and quitline-availability
reasons. Canadian smokers endorsed the most reasons, and smokers in the US and Australia
increased in number of reasons endorsed over the course of the study period. Endorsement of
health warnings, and perhaps price, appears to peak in the year or so after the change is
introduced, whereas other responses were not immediately linked to policy changes.
Conclusions: Differences in reasons for thinking about quitting exist among smokers in
countries with different histories of tobacco control policies. Health concern is consistently the
most common reason for quitting and the strongest predictor of future attempts.
WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS
Cigarette smokers commonly cite health concerns, social concerns, and cost as reasons
for wanting to quit smoking
Tobacco control policies have been implemented to increase quit rates in the United
Kingdom (UK), Canada, the United States (US), and Australia
Absent from the literature is a comprehensive multinational evaluation of smokers’
reasons for thinking about quitting situated within the context of the tobacco control
policies that were implemented to directly or indirectly increase quitting
Our findings show that between 2002 and 2015, smokers’ concern for personal health
was consistently the most frequently endorsed reason for thinking about quitting in each
country and across waves, and was most strongly associated with making a quit attempt
Endorsement of health warnings, and perhaps price (particularly in Australia), appears to
peak in the year or so after the change is introduced, whereas other responses were not
immediately linked to policy changes
INTRODUCTION
Numerous studies using various samples of current and former cigarette smokers identify health
concerns as the most common reason for wanting to quit smoking.1 Other commonly cited
reasons for quitting include social concerns, such as modelling behaviour for children or pressure
from others to quit, and cost, but prevalence of endorsement of these reasons is typically modest
in comparison to prevalence of health concerns. Hummel et al. (2015) evaluated trends in
thinking about quitting in six European countries and found that cigarette price increases and
warning labels trigger thoughts about quitting.2 Absent from the literature, however, is a
comprehensive evaluation among the United Kingdom (UK), Canada, the United States (US),
and Australia, in smokers’ reasons for thinking about quitting situated within the context of the
tobacco control policies that were implemented to directly or indirectly impact quit attempt rates
in these countries.
Table 1 presents an overview of tobacco control policies that were implemented in the
UK, Canada, the US, and Australia between 2001 and 2015. The UK’s national tobacco control
strategy, first laid out in 1998 with the publication, Smoking Kills: A White Paper on Tobacco3,
included a commitment for significant increased government investment in media campaigns,
increases in tobacco price, reduction in smoking in public places, and increased investment in
intensive resources for smoking cessation (including free or subsidized stop-smoking
medications and face-to-face behavioral support from trained specialists). Since then, mass
media expenditure in the UK rose and peaked in 2004/5, declined and dropped to 0 pounds in
2010/11, then rose until 2012/3 before starting to decline again. Annual tobacco tax increases
were at or slightly above inflation rates until 2010, and funding on cessation services in the UK
has been declining steadily over recent years with some services closing. During the past 15
years, Canada added pictorial health warnings to cigarette packs and introduced a revised set of
larger pictorial warnings covering 75% of the pack in 2012; other policies implemented in
Canada included bans on tobacco advertising, bans on smoking in indoor public places, and bans
on point of sale tobacco displays. During the same time period, the US implemented a national
media anti-smoking campaign direct at youth, created a national network of telephone helplines
and raised the federal excise tax on cigarettes; many states in the US also raised cigarette taxes
and adopted clean indoor air laws. Australia has been funding a comprehensive national mass-
media anti-smoking campaign aimed at raising public awareness of the health risks of smoking
since 1997 (Australian National Tobacco Campaign); other policies implemented in Australia
included bans on terms like Light and Mild, augmenting cigarette pack warnings with graphic
images in 2006, banning smoking in licensed venues in 2006 and 2007 (state by state), a 25%
increase in tax in 2010, and both increasing warning size and mandating standardized packaging
in 2012.
Table 1. Tobacco control policies in the UK, Canada, the US, and Australia between 2001 and 2015ⱡ
|------| |--------| |---------| |------|ITC survey wave Wave 1 Wave 2 Wave 3 Wave 4
Year 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
United Kingdom
Increase in size of health warnings on
cigarette packs; Ban on tobacco advertising, promotion,
and domestic sponsorship
Regulation of point of sale
advertisements
Mass media expenditure peaked in 2004/5,
dropped to £0 in
2010/11, then rose again until
2012/3
Ban on smoking in
indoor public places
Pictorial warnings on 40% of back of cigarette
packs
Canada
Pictorial health
warnings on 50% of front and back of
pack
Ban on arts and events sponsorship
Agreement to stop using
light/mild descriptors
on cigarettes
Ban on retail displays of cigarettes
(10 provinces
and territories)
Ban on tobacco
advertising in most print
media
United States1 state with smokefree
law
2 states with smokefree
law
5 states with smokefree
law
7 states with smokefree
law
Federal excise tax raised to
$1.01/pack; FDA given regulatory authority
|-------|Wave 5
|---------|Wave 6
|----------|Wave 7
over tobacco products; Ban on flavored
cigarettes except
menthol; 12 states with smokefree
law
AustraliaBan on
light/mild descriptors
Health warnings on 30% of front and 90% of
back of cigarette
packs; Ban on smoking in enclosed
public spaces
Bans on smoking in
licensed venues (two
largest states)
ⱡAdapted from "Timeline of Tobacco Control Policies and ITC Surveys" available at www.ITCproject.org
Table 1 continued. Tobacco control policies in the UK, Canada, the US, and Australia between 2001 and 2015ⱡ
ITC survey wave
Year 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
United Kingdom
Increase in tobacco tax to
exceed inflation rate; Ban on
tobacco product placement on
TV/on-demand programs
Ban on tobacco displays in large
shops
Ban on tobacco displays in all shops; Ban on
smoking in private vehicles
with children
Canada
Ban on indoor smoking in all provinces and
territories; Ban on retail displays in all provinces and territories; Ban on
flavorings and additives (except
menthol) in cigarettes and
cigarillos
Ban on smoking in cars with children (9
provinces and territories)
16 new picture-based health
warnings; Warning labels cover 75% of
front and back of pack; 8 new
picture-based messages inside
pack; Quitline number and web address added to
warnings
Ban on smoking in cars with children (10
provinces/territories)
United States
Ban on sponsorship; Ban
on light/mild descriptors;
Cigarettes cannot be sold in packs of less than 20
30 states with smokefree law
Australia Tobacco taxes increase by 25%
Ban on point-of-sale displays
(started at end of 2009, last state
implemented ban in 2012)
Plain packaging; Graphic warnings
cover 75% of front and 90% of
back of pack; Ban on smoking
in cars with children
12.5% increase in tobacco taxes
per year over next 4 years
ⱡAdapted from "Timeline of Tobacco Control Policies and ITC Surveys" available at
Wave 8|----------| |--------------------------------------------------------------------|
Wave 9
The International Tobacco Control Four Country Survey (ITC-4C) asks smokers from the
UK, Canada, the US, and Australia, about their reasons for thinking about quitting, over the time
period when many of these tobacco control policies were implemented in each country. The
longitudinal design of the ITC-4 further allows us to evaluate the association between thinking
about quitting for a variety of reasons and making a quit attempt at follow-up survey. Within the
context of the tobacco control policies implemented in each country, the purpose of this study
was to explore (1) between-country differences in smokers’ reasons for thinking about quitting,
(2) within-country trends in smokers’ reasons for thinking about quitting, and (3) associations
between reasons for thinking about quitting and making a quit attempt at follow-up wave.
METHODS
Participants
Participants were adults aged 18+ from the UK, Canada, the US, and Australia, who were
interviewed as part of the International Tobacco Control Four Country Survey between 2002 and
2015. The ITC-4C is a prospective cohort survey that used random digit dialling to recruit
nationally representative samples of approximately 2000 smokers from each country in 2002.
Response rates ranged from 26% (US) to 50% (Canada), and prior analyses have demonstrated
that the demographic profiles of respondents to this survey were similar to the profiles of those
who participated in national benchmark surveys, suggesting that any non-response to this survey
is comparable to that of benchmark surveys4. Participants were re-contacted approximately
annually to complete follow-up surveys and new smokers were recruited each year to offset
those lost to attrition (~30% on average5). Smokers who subsequently quit smoking were
retained in the sample. The study protocol was approved by the institutional review
boards/research ethics boards of the University of Waterloo (Canada), Roswell Park Cancer
Institute (US), University of Strathclyde (UK), University of Stirling (UK), The Open University
(UK), and The Cancer Council Victoria (Australia). Detailed descriptions of the ITC-4C survey
have been published elsewhere4-7.
All participants were current smokers at recruitment into the study (i.e. they smoked at
least 100 cigarettes in their lifetimes and smoked at least one cigarette in the last 30 days).
Evaluation of between-country differences and within country trends in reasons for thinking
about quitting included current daily smokers at each wave (N=20,786 individuals and N=47,590
observations), and evaluation of making a quit attempt included current daily smokers at
previous wave (N=14,071 and N=18,526 observations).
Measures
Reasons for thinking about quitting
During each survey wave, smokers were asked about various reasons for thinking about quitting:
concern for personal health; concern about the effect of cigarette smoke on non-smokers; society
disapproves of smoking; price of cigarettes; smoking restrictions at work; smoking restrictions in
public places; advice from a doctor, dentist, or other health professional to quit; free or lower
cost stop-smoking medication; availability of telephone helpline/quitline/information line;
advertisements or information about the health risks of smoking; warning labels on cigarette
packages; setting an example for children. Respondents were asked each item separately, and
response options were: not at all, somewhat, or very much, which were dichotomized to indicate
whether a reason was endorsed at all (i.e. somewhat or very much) vs. not at all.
Due to the high correlations among reasons, we performed exploratory factor analysis so
we could organize our presentation of reasons according to their relatedness. Concern for
personal health, setting an example for children, and concern about effect on non-smokers were
highly related so we grouped them as ‘Concern/risk’ reasons; smoking restrictions at work,
smoking restrictions in public places, and society disapproves of smoking were highly related
and were grouped as ‘Public/society’ reasons; free/lower cost stop-smoking medication,
availability of telephone helpline/quitline/information line, and doctor/dentist/other health
professional advice to quit were related and were grouped as ‘Assistance’ reasons;
advertisements/information about health risks and warning labels on cigarette packs were
moderately related and were grouped as ‘Information’ reasons, even though they were also
somewhat related to the ‘Concern/risk’ reasons; price of cigarettes stood out as being least
correlated with the other reasons (Supplemental Table 1). We computed the average percent
endorsement for each group of related reasons using predicted values from adjusted regression
models as described below in the Analysis section. We also calculated the total number of
reasons endorsed in each country.
Nicotine dependence
During each survey, smokers were asked how many cigarettes they smoke per day (CPD),
categorised into1-10, 11-20, 21-30, and 31+, and how soon after waking they have the first
cigarette (time to first cigarette, TTFC), categorised into >60 minutes, 31-60 minutes, 6-30
minutes, and 0-5 minutes.
Making a quit attempt
During each follow-up survey, prior year smokers were asked, “Have you made any attempts to
stop smoking since we last talked with you?”
Demographics and other covariates
The following covariates were included in adjusted analyses: sex, age group (i.e., 18-29, 30-54,
55+), majority/minority group (based on the standard way of identifying minorities in each
country, i.e., racial/ethnic group in the UK, Canada, and the US, and English language spoken at
home in Australia), level of education (i.e., “low” if completed high school or less in Australia,
Canada, and the US, or secondary/vocational or less in the UK, “moderate” if completed
college/university (no degree) in the UK, technical/trade/some university (no degree) in
Australia, or community college/trade/technical school/some university (no degree) in Canada
and the US, or “high” if completed university or postgraduate in all countries), annual household
income (defined as “low” if less than US$30,000 (Australia, Canada, US) or less than £30,000
(UK), “moderate” if between US$30,000 and US$59,999 (or £30,000 and £44,999 in the UK), or
“high” if equal to or greater than US$60,000 (or £45,000 in the UK), time in sample (i.e., the
number of waves a respondent participated in the ITC survey), and difference in time between
survey waves (because the gap in time between surveys differed by country at the end of the
study period). The exact wording of all items used in the ITC surveys can be found at:
www.itcproject.org8.
Statistical analyses
Generalized estimating equations (GEEs) were used so that participants from all waves of the
study period could be included in analyses at once while statistically controlling for dependence
among observations from the same individuals9,10. Regression models specified the unstructured
within-person correlation matrix and confidence intervals were calculated using a robust
variance estimator. For each analysis, model covariance parameters were set at a maximum of
100 iterations and convergence tolerance for the coefficient vector was set at 1e-6. All analyses
were conducted using Stata Version 1111.
Between-country differences in reasons for thinking about quitting
Among current daily smokers, regression analyses were used to model the association between
country and endorsement of reasons, aggregated across the study period and adjusted for sex, age
group, majority/minority group, income, education, CPD, TTFC, survey wave, time in sample,
and difference in time between waves, which are hereafter referred to as ‘covariates.’ For each
country, post-hoc estimation was used to generate predicted values of endorsement of each
reason and each group of reasons.
Within-country trends in reasons for thinking about quitting
Among current daily smokers, prevalence of endorsement of reasons was plotted by country and
by wave, and linear, quadratic, and cubic trends in endorsement of reasons over the course of the
study period were evaluated using logistic regression analyses (adjusted for covariates). That is,
wave of the study period was the independent variable and endorsement of reasons was the
dependent variable; odds ratios for the linear trends indicate the odds of endorsing each reason
per one unit increase in wave. When significant non-linear trends were found, we reviewed the
prevalence estimates plotted over time alongside the policy changes that took place over time
and ran time-limited regression analyses to test whether specific policy changes are associated
with changes in endorsement of reasons.
Reasons for thinking about quitting and making a quit attempt
Among current daily smokers at previous wave, regression analyses were used to evaluate the
association between the reasons and making a quit attempt, aggregated across the study period
and across the four countries. One set of models was adjusted for country and the covariates
(Model 1) and a second set of models was adjusted for country, the covariates, and each other
reason (Model 2). For each set of models, interactions between country and each reason were
tested.
RESULTS
Between-country differences in reasons for thinking about quitting
Table 2 shows country differences in reasons for thinking about quitting aggregated across the
study period. The most frequently endorsed individual reasons for thinking about quitting were
concern for personal health, price of cigarettes, and setting an example for children. Smokers in
the UK or Canada were more likely to endorse ‘Public/society’ reasons (42.5% and 46.4%,
respectively) than smokers in the US (37.0%) or Australia (39.1%). Smokers in the UK or the
US were more likely to endorse ‘Assistance’ reasons (39.6% for each country) than smokers in
Canada (38.5%) or Australia (37.1%). Canadian smokers were most likely to endorse
‘Concern/risk’ reasons (73.8%), ‘Public/society’ reasons (46.4%), and ‘Information’ reasons
(41.3%); Canadian smokers also endorsed the greatest number of reasons (mean=6.3 out of 12).
Smokers in the US were most likely to endorse ‘Price’ as a reason for thinking about quitting
(74.5%).
Table 2. Endorsement of reasons that led smokers to think about quitting, by country
United Kingdom Canada United States AustraliaReasons to think about quitting % (95% CI) % (95% CI) % (95% CI) % (95% CI)
Concern/risk reasons Concern for personal health 74.0 (73.9-74.2) 82.5 (82.4-82.6) 80.6 (80.5-80.7) 80.0 (79.9-80.2)Setting example for children 70.3 (70.1-70.5) 73.4 (73.3-73.6) 71.4 (71.2-71.6) 70.0 (68.8-70.2)Concern for health of others 59.3 (59.1-59.5) 65.5 (65.4-65.6) 62.3 (62.1-62.5) 59.0 (58.9-59.2)Mean of concern/risk reasons 67.9 (67.7-68.1) 73.8 (73.7-73.9) 71.4 (71.3-71.6) 69.7 (69.5-69.8)
Public/society reasons Smoking restrictions in public 46.4 (46.2-46.6) 50.0 (49.9-50.1) 41.9 (41.8-42.1) 42.7 (42.6-42.8)
Smoking restrictions at work 35.4 (35.2-35.6) 38.0 (37.9-38.1) 28.4 (28.3-28.6) 27.7 (27.5-27.8)Society disapproves 45.6 (45.4-45.7) 51.3 (51.1-51.5) 40.7 (40.5-40.8) 46.9 (46.7-47.1)Mean of public/society reasons 42.5 (42.3-42.6) 46.4 (46.3-46.5) 37.0 (36.9-37.2) 39.1 (39.0-39.2)
Assistance reasons Free/lower-cost SSMs 44.8 (44.6-45.0) 40.3 (40.1-40.4) 41.2 (41.0-41.4) 43.3 (43.1-43.4)Availability of helpline/quitline 26.7 (26.6-26.9) 21.9 (21.7-22.0) 21.2 (21.1-21.4) 24.8 (24.7-24.9)Health professional advice 47.3 (47.2-47.5) 53.5 (53.3-53.6) 56.3 (56.2-56.5) 43.2 (43.1-43.4)
Mean of assistance reasons 39.6 (39.5-39.8) 38.5 (38.4-38.7) 39.6 (39.4-39.7) 37.1 (37.0-37.3)
Information reasons Advertisements about risks 41.3 (41.1-41.5) 46.1 (45.9-46.2) 40.0 (39.8-40.1) 44.2 (44.0-44.4)Warning labels on cigarette packs 35.6 (35.4-35.8) 36.5 (36.4-36.6) 24.1 (23.9-24.3) 33.4 (33.2-33.6)Mean of information reasons 38.5 (38.3-38.6) 41.3 (41.2-41.4) 32.0 (31.9-32.2) 38.8 (38.6-39.0)
Price reason Price of cigarettes 66.6 (66.5-66.8) 73.4 (73.2-73.6) 74.5 (74.4-74.6) 72.8 (72.7-73.0)
Total number of reasons Mean total number of reasons 5.93 (5.92-5.95) 6.32 (6.31-6.33) 5.83 (5.81-5.84) 5.88 (5.86-5.89)Notes. Estimates adjusted for sex, age group, majority/minority group, education, income, CPD, TTFC, time in
sample, and difference in time between waves;Sample sizes for 'Concern for personal health' are UK: N=4717 ind, 11442 obs; CA: N=4884 ind, 11966 obs; US: N=6703 ind, 12812 obs; AU: 4482 ind, 11370 obs. Ns vary slightly for other reasons
Within-country trends in reasons for thinking about quitting
Table 3 shows within-country change in endorsement of reasons for thinking about quitting per
wave, and Supplemental Figure 1 shows these data plotted at each wave of the study period for
each country. Several reasons were increasingly reported over the 13 years, but there were nearly
as many non-linear changes.
Upward trends
In the UK, there were upward trends in endorsement of smoking restrictions in public places and
at work. In Canada, there was an overall upward trend for the group of ‘Assistance’ reasons, with
an individual upward trend for availability of free/lower cost SSMs. In the US, there were overall
upward trends for the sum of reasons endorsed, the group of ‘Public/society’ reasons, and the
group of ‘Assistance’ reasons, with individual upward trends for smoking restrictions at work,
availability of free/lower cost SSMs, availability of a telephone helpline/quitline, and advice
from a health professional. In Australia, there were overall upward trends for the sum of reasons
endorsed, the group of ‘Assistance’ reasons, and the group of ‘Information’ reasons, with
individual upward trends for smoking restrictions at work, availability of free/lower cost SSMs,
availability of a telephone helpline/quitline, advice from a health professional, and warning
labels on cigarette packs. Specific policy-related upward trends tended to occur in countries
where relevant policies were implemented during the middle to end of the study period.
Downward trends
In the UK, there was an overall downward trend for the group of ‘Concern/risk’ reasons and the
group of ‘Information’ reasons, with individual downward trends for concern for health of
others, advertisements about health risks, and warning labels on cigarette packs. In Canada, there
was an overall downward trend for the group of ‘Information’ reasons with individual downward
trends for advertisements about health risks, warning labels on cigarette packs, and the price of
cigarettes. These policy-related downward trends tended to occur where relevant policies were
implemented during the beginning of the study period. There were no downward trends in the
US or Australia.
Non-linear trends
Various non-linear changes in endorsement of reasons were observed in different countries over
the course of the study period, as identified in Table 3 and depicted in Supplemental Figure 1.
Some of these shifts in reasons align with related policy changes; in Australia, the rise in
endorsing warning labels as a reason between 2005/06 and 2006-07, and again between 2010/11
and 2013/15, corresponds with when new stronger warnings were added, and in the latter case,
standardised packaging (AOR=2.20, p<.001and AOR= 1.56, p<.001, respectively, for time-
limited regression analysis of the change in endorsing warning labels immediately before and
after policy change occurred, data not shown); in Canada, the rise in endorsing warning labels
between 2010/11 and 2013/15 corresponds to the addition of new picture warnings and increase
in warning size (AOR=1.35, p<.001 for change in endorsement immediately before and after
policy change occurred, data not shown); in Australia, endorsing price rose markedly
immediately after the large tax increases in 2010 (AOR=1.77, p<.001 for change in endorsement
immediately before and after policy change occurred, data not shown) and also rose in the UK in
2010 when tobacco tax increases started to exceed inflation rates (AOR=1.56, p<.001 for change
in endorsement immediately before policy change until the end of the study period, data not
shown). None of the other non-linearities can be readily linked to policy changes.
Table 3. Linear trends in endorsement of reasons that led smokers to think about quitting, by country
United Kingdom Canada United States Australia
Reasons to think about quitting AOR 95% CI AOR 95% CI AOR 95% CI AOR 95% CI
Concern/risk reasons Concern for personal health 0.97a0.93-1.00 1.00
0.96-1.04 1.00 0.95-1.04 1.02 0.98-1.07
Setting example for children 0.970.93-1.00 1.05
1.01-1.09 1.01 0.98-1.05 1.04 1.01-1.08
Concern for health of others 0.92a0.89-0.95 1.01
0.97-1.04 0.99 0.95-1.02 1.01 0.98-1.04
Mean of concern/risk reasons 0.99a0.98-0.99 1.00
1.00-1.01 1.00 0.99-1.01 1.01 1.00-1.01
Public/society reasons Smoking restrictions in public 1.051.02-1.09 0.97a
0.94-1.00 1.04 1.00-1.07 1.04 1.01-1.08
Smoking restrictions at work 1.061.03-1.10 1.02
0.99-1.06 1.05 1.01-1.09 1.06 1.02-1.10
Society disapproves 0.97a0.94-1.01 0.96a 0.93-
0.99 1.03 1.00-1.07 0.99a
0.96-1.02
Mean of public/society reasons 1.01a1.00-1.01 1.00a 0.99-
1.00 1.01 1.00-1.02 1.01a
1.00-1.01
Assistance reasons Free/lower-cost SSMs 0.98a0.95-1.02 1.06a
1.02-1.09 1.07a 1.04-1.11 1.09a 1.06-1.13
Availability of helpline/quitline 0.96a0.92-0.99 1.03
0.99-1.06 1.14a 1.09-1.18 1.09 1.05-1.13
Health professional advice 1.030.99-1.06 1.03
1.00-1.06 1.05a 1.02-1.09 1.10a 1.07-1.14
Mean of assistance reasons 1.00a0.99-1.00 1.01a
1.00-1.01 1.02a 1.01-1.02 1.02a 1.02-1.03
Information reasons Advertisements about risks 0.94a0.91-0.97 0.95a
0.92-0.98 1.00 0.97-1.03 1.01 0.98-1.05
Warning labels on cigarette packs 0.930.90-0.96 0.95
0.92-0.98 1.02 0.98-1.06 1.16a 1.12-1.20
Mean of information reasons 0.99a0.98-0.99 0.99a
0.98-0.99 1.00 1.00-1.01 1.02a 1.01-1.03
Price reason Price of cigarettes 0.960.93-1.00 0.87a
0.84-0.91 1.00 0.96-1.03 0.96 0.92-0.99
Total number of reasons Mean total number of reasons 0.95a0.89-1.00
0.980
0.93-1.04 1.08a 1.02-1.15 1.14 1.08-1.21
Notes. GEE modelling used; AOR=Adjusted Odds Ratio; Analyses adjusted for sex, age group, majority/minority group, education, income, CPD, TTFC, time in sample, and difference in time between waves;Sample sizes for 'Concern for personal health' are UK: N=4717 ind, 11442 obs; CA: N=4884 ind, 11966 obs; US: N=6703 ind, 12812 obs; AU: 4482 ind, 11370 obs. Ns vary slightly for other reasonsaPresence of a non-linear trend, p<.01
Reasons for thinking about quitting and making a quit attempt
Table 4 shows associations between endorsing reasons and making a quit attempt at follow up
wave. The group of ‘Concern/risk’ reasons was most strongly associated with making a quit
attempt, particularly ‘Concern for personal health,’ with those endorsing this reason having a
nearly two-fold greater odds of making a quit attempt without adjustment for other reasons, and a
nearly 70% greater odds of making a quit attempt after adjusting for every other reason; the
strength of this relationship was consistent across the four countries. The group of ‘Assistance’
reasons and the group of ‘Information’ reasons were each positively associated with making a
quit attempt after adjusting for all reasons not included in the respective group.
Individual reasons positively associated with making a quit attempt after adjustment for
all other reasons included: advice from a health professional, advertisements about health risks,
warning labels, setting an example for children, society disapproves, and availability of
helpline/quitline. The strength of these associations was generally consistent across the four
countries, though there were exceptions for advice from a health professional and setting an
example for children, both of which were more strongly associated with making a quit attempt in
the US than in the UK. Lastly, there was a 9% greater odds of making a quit attempt for each
increase of one in the total number of reasons endorsed.
Table 4. Making a quit attempt as a function of endorsement of reasons that led smokers to think about quitting
Model 1 Model 2
Reasons to think about quittingEndorsed
reason%
attempt AOR 95% CI AOR 95% CIConcern for personal health No 28 ref ref
Yes 44 1.98 1.85-2.11 1.68 1.56-1.81Price of cigarettes No 37 ref ref
Yes 43 1.29 1.22-1.36 1.06 1.00-1.13Setting example for children No 36 ref ref
Yes 44 1.36 1.29-1.43 1.09a 1.02-1.16Concern for health of others No 37 ref ref
Yes 44 1.29a 1.22-1.35 1.01 0.96-1.08Health professional advice No 37 ref ref
Yes 45 1.40a,b 1.34-1.47 1.16a 1.10-1.23Society disapproves No 38 ref ref
Yes 45 1.29 1.23-1.35 1.08 1.02-1.14Smoking restrictions in public No 39 ref ref
Yes 44 1.25 1.19-1.31 1.05 0.99-1.11Advertisements about risks No 37 ref ref
Yes 46 1.40 1.34-1.47 1.13 1.06-1.20Free/lower-cost SSMs No 39 ref ref
Yes 44 1.27 1.21-1.33 1.03 0.97-1.09Smoking restrictions at work No 40 ref ref
Yes 43 1.16 1.10-1.22 0.92 0.86-0.97Warning labels on cigarette packs No 39 ref ref
Yes 47 1.38 1.31-1.45 1.09 1.02-1.16Availability of helpline/quitline No 40 ref ref
Yes 46 1.34 1.27-1.42 1.08 1.01-1.16Sum of reasons endorsed# 1.09 1.08-1.10
Notes. GEE modelling used; AOR=Adjusted Odds Ratio; Outcome assessed at wave following wave at which reasons for thinking about quitting and covariates were assessed;1Model 1 analyses adjusted for country, sex, age group, majority/minority group, education, income, CPD, TTFC, survey wave, time in sample, and difference in time between waves;2Model 2 analyses adjusted for variables included in Model 1 and each reason for thinking about quitting;Ns for 'Concern for personal health' are UK: N=3186 ind, 8215 obs; CA: N=3072 ind, 7875 obs; US: N=3040 ind, 6808 obs; AU: 3159 ind, 8327 obs, and vary slightly for other reasonsaAssociation is stronger in the US than in the UK (p<.01)bAssociation is stronger in the US than in Australia (p<.01)#Sum of reasons endorsed AOR indicates the increase in likelihood of making a quit attempt per an increase of one for total number of items endorsed
DISCUSSION
Results from this study show that between 2002 and 2015, smokers’ concern for personal health
was the most frequently endorsed reason for thinking about quitting in the UK, Canada, the US,
and Australia, and across all reasons to quit smoking, concern for personal health had the
strongest association with making a quit attempt at follow-up wave. These findings are consistent
with numerous studies citing concern for one’s health as the number one reason smokers report
for wanting to quit1, former smokers report for having quit12, and quit attempters report as their
trigger for attempting to quit13.
The tobacco control policies that have been implemented in each of these countries
during the study period (see Table 1) provide some context for interpreting the between-country
differences and within-country changes in smokers’ reasons for thinking about quitting over
time. We observed a non-linear trend for ‘Concern/risk’ reasons in the UK such that
endorsement of these reasons tended to rise until 2005/06, declined for several years, and then
began to rise again after 2010/11 (Supplemental Figure 1). These changes can likely be attributed
to the dramatic changes in media expenditures in the UK during this time, which rose and peaked
in 2004/05, dropped to £0 in 2010/11, and then started to rise again. We also observed overall
upward trends in thinking about quitting due to smoking restrictions in the UK, consistent with
the implementation of smoking bans in the UK during the course of our study period.
Several tobacco control policies were implemented in Canada during the course of our
study period including bans on tobacco advertising, smoking in indoor public places, and point
of sale tobacco displays, and we found that smokers in Canada endorsed an average of 6.3
reasons out of the 12 reasons evaluated, with greater number of reasons endorsed being
associated with greater odds of making a quit attempt. Canada introduced a revised set of
pictorial health warnings covering 75% of the front and back of cigarette packs in 2012, a policy
that has been shown to be associated with increased motivation to quit14-16, but we observed a
steep increase in Canadian smokers’ thinking about quitting due to warning labels after 2008,
which precedes the introduction of the new labels, so not all of the increase can be attributed to
the new warnings.
During the course of our study period, the US created a national network of telephone
helplines and raised the federal excise tax on cigarettes, and many states also raised cigarette
taxes and adopted clean indoor air laws, all of which are positivity associated with quitting
thoughts/behaviors17-21. Our data show that, indeed, there were overall upward trends in
endorsement of ‘Public/society’ and ‘Assistance’ reasons during the course of the study period.
Interestingly, we observed a spike between 2008 and 2011 in the prevalence of US smokers
reporting that warning labels on cigarette packs made them think about quitting. Although
pictorial warnings were never added to cigarette packs in the US, this corresponds to the time
when the US Food and Drug Administration was granted regulatory authority over tobacco
products and issued regulations to add pictorial health warnings to cigarette packs22.
For Australia, Supplemental Figure 1L shows a steep increase in endorsing the price of
cigarettes reason following the tobacco tax increase of 25% in 2010. Cigarette price/tax increases
are a key component of tobacco control strategies, and these data demonstrate that the greatest
increases in price are associated with the greatest increases in thoughts about quitting, but this
motivator diminishes over time (e.g., Supplemental Figure 1L, Canada), suggesting that large
and repeated increases in price are needed to sustain their impact. In Australia, we also observed
a steep increase in thinking about quitting due to cigarette pack warnings following the
introduction of graphic health warnings to 30% of the front and 90% of the back of cigarette
packs in 2006 and then another steep increase following the introduction of larger graphic health
warnings (75% of the front and 90% of the back) of cigarette packs coupled with standardized or
plain packaging requirements in late 2012.
The findings we report here are generally consistent with those reported by Hummel et
al., who evaluated policy triggers for thinking about quitting in several European countries and
found that price was the trigger most commonly endorsed across countries.2 Price was also the
policy-specific reason that we found to be most commonly endorsed in the UK, Canada, the US,
and Australia, but we also report similarly high endorsement of concern/risk reasons in all four
countries (which were not assessed by Hummel et al.). We also observed changes in some non-
policy-specific reasons over the course of our study period including a noteworthy upward trend
in thinking about quitting due to receipt of advice to quit from a health professional among
smokers in the US and Australia. Further, this reason was relatively strongly associated with
making a quit attempt, particularly in the US, demonstrating the importance of health
professionals ensuring they give smokers appropriate advice.
Early data from the ITC-4C (2002–2005) showed that smokers in the UK were less likely
to attempt to quit than smokers in Canada, the US, or Australia23, which seems to line up with the
current finding that smokers in the UK are less likely than their counterparts in the other three
countries to endorse concern for personal health as a reason for thinking about quitting, which is
the reason most strongly associated with making a quit attempt. However, further research is
needed to determine whether there are differences among these countries in cognitive or
behavioural factors such as quitting self-efficacy and nicotine dependence, and how such
differences may relate to quit attempt rates in each country. Additional limitations of the current
study include relatively low survey response rates (though prior analyses have shown that our
participant characteristics correspond well to characteristics of responders to national benchmark
surveys), and an average attrition rate of approximately 30% (though we adjusted our analyses
for characteristics known to vary with respect to retention). Balanced against our study
limitations is our use of a large nationally representative sample of smokers from four countries
who were surveyed over the course of more than a decade, our use of GEEs, which accounted for
repeated analyses of the same respondents at different points in time, and our ability to examine
changes both between and within countries.
CONCLUSIONS
Smokers’ concern for personal health is the most frequently endorsed reason for thinking about
quitting in the UK, Canada, the US, and Australia, and it is strongly associated with making a
quit attempt. Various changes in endorsement of other reasons over the course of the study
period were observed in these countries, some of which are likely linked to policy changes. Also,
increases in the number of reasons endorsed was associated with increases in the likelihood of
making a quit attempt, which suggests a benefit for tobacco control efforts that broaden the
number of reasons smokers think about quitting.
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